This is an appeal concerning admiralty jurisdiction. We conclude that admiralty jurisdiction is lacking.
I. Background
A. Facts
This action arises from the failed launching of a new cruise line. The defendant CIT Group/Equipment Financing, Inc., (CIT) acquired the motor vessel Sun
The deal that emerged was as follows. The purchase price of $25 million was to be mostly financed by CIT, secured by mortgages on the vessel and a pledge of the contemplated charter and of Royal Venture stock.
The Royal companies began the refurbishment on July 7. As of late July, no Royal company had yet provided the required security, and CIT — worried that maritime hens on the vessel would result if the Royal companies defaulted on their obligations to refur-bishers — thrеatened to end the transaction if security were not provided.
Royal Venture also sought help from Gary Kimball, another plaintiff here, who in turn recruited the plaintiffs other than Wilkins (whom we shah call “the investors”) to provide varying amounts of cash to the Royal companies. In exchange, Royal Vеnture provided the investors with notes promising payment from Royal Ventures before certain dates in the fall of 1996 at an 18% interest rate.
By October, it was evident that the Royal companies would not be able to raise enough capital to close the deal. CIT notified the Royal companies of their default under the purchase agreement, and CIT drew upon the letter of credit to pay off the debts that the Royal companies had incurred in refurbishing the Sun. The investors allege that their loans were also used to pay off maritime liens, although there is no evidence to that effect in the record — only, conclusory affidavits.
B. Procedural History .
This action began when" a group of the Sun’s seamen sued CIT for wages. The plaintiffs (as we have been calling them here) moved to intervene and assert two claims against the Sun and CIT. In Count I, they sued the Sun and claimed maritime liens under 46 U.S.C. § 31342, in Wilkins’s case because he furnished the letter of credit, and in the other plaintiffs’ casеs because they provided cash to the Royal companies, supposedly to pay refurbishment expenses. In Count II, they sued CIT and the Sun, claiming fraud by CIT' or the vessel.
CIT moved to dismiss the Count II fraud claim on the ground of lаck of admiralty jurisdiction. While this motion was pending, the plaintiffs moved for partial summary judgment on their maritime hen claim. CIT opposed this motion in part on the ground that no maritime jurisdiction existed over the maritime lien claim. The district court agreed and dismissed the. action for. want of subject matter jurisdiction. Although the plaintiffs briefly mentioned diversity as an alternative basis for jurisdiction in their response to the motion to dismiss, the district court did not explicitly consider it. The plaintiffs now appeal the dismissal of the action, arguing that either admiralty or di
II. Discussion
Maritime jurisdiction is a prerequisite to a claim against a vessel asserting a maritime lien. See E.S. Binnings, Inc. v. M/V Saudi Riyadh,
There are many agreements in the facts of this case, both express and implied. The plaintiffs urge us to base jurisdiction on the agreements betwеen Royal Venture and the suppliers who furnished goods and services for the Sun’s refurbishment. Such contracts are maritime, as they are for repair of a vessel. See North Pac. S.S. Co. v. Hall Bros. Marine Ry. & Shipbuilding Co.,
We are unpersuaded because the plaintiffs cannot benefit from the rule of advances. Not just any creditor whose money goes to discharge maritime liens himself acquires a maritime lien. Rather, the advance must be on the credit of the vessel. Tramp Oil & Marine, Ltd. v. M/V “Mermaid I”,
The first circumstance is that the very purpose of the advance was to satisfy the purchaser’s" contractual "obligation to protect the vessel owner from the maritime liens. CIT shifted the-responsibility of paying maritime suppliers to the Royal companies. Thus, CIT was vulnerable-to a default beyond its control. Fearing this possibility, from day one of this transaction CIT took every possible measure to protect itself from the possibility that the Royal companies’ default would leave any liens on the vessel that would either be superior to CIT’s purchase-money mortgage (if the sale closed) or impede a future sale (if the deal with the Royal companies fell through). Indeed, it was only because CIT insisted on enforcing its rights to protection that Wilkins and the investors participated in the transaction.- With this background, it wоuld be unjust to presume that the vessel would end up encumbered, anyway — because of the Royal, companies’ apparent default in reimbursing their investors as well as the vessel’s refurbishers.
The second circumstance is that the advances were made not to, or on behalf of, the owner, the vessel, or their agents. Rather, thе advances were at the instance of, and with promise of reimbursement from, a party with no property interest in any vessel — the Royal companies. In the paradigmatic ease, the advancer deals with the owner or his agent, and the advance- is- either straight to the owner or to a lienholder, on the owner’s behalf. See, e.g., Sasportes,
Because of these important distinctions from thе typical advance case, -we hold that the presumption that money is advanced on the credit of the vessel does not apply. There is no substantial evidence to support such a finding without the presumption, only conclusory statements by the plaintiffs in their affidavits. This mere scintilla of evidence is not enough. Cf. Dolihite v. Maughon By and Through Videon,
Jurisdiction over Count II, which claims fraud against the Sun and CIT, was not explicitly addressed by the district court. The fraud claims are plainly not, in any event, within the court’s admiralty jurisdiction; torts fall within maritime jurisdiction only if they occur or have effects on navigable water, see Jerome B. Grubart, Inc. v. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co.,
On the other hand, the plaintiffs contend that jurisdiction may be based on diversity. This possibility was alleged in the complaint. But apart from a brief remark in response to CIT’s motion to dismiss, the plaintiffs did not argue in the district court that diversity is a valid alternative basis for jurisdiction. The district court accordingly did not determine if diversity jurisdiction is available.
Rather than addressing the issue, we remand to the district court for it to consider in the first instance. A complete remand, however, is unneсessary. Diversity jurisdiction does not exist over Count I and the Count II fraud claim against the vessel; vessels may not be sued in diversity. Powell v. Offshore Navigation, Inc.,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the dismissal for want of subject matter jurisdiction of the claims in Count I and the Count II claims against the Sun. We vacate the dismissal of the Count II claims against CIT and remand for the district court to determine whether diversity jurisdiction exists over these claims.
AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED AND REMANDED IN PART.
Notes
. The ship has been renamed, but for convenience we will continue to use the old name. For similar reasons of convenience, we refer to CIT as the owner of the Sun even though title reposes in a CIT subsidiary. CIT has taken inconsistent positions in this litigation with respect to which subsidiary has title — an inconsistency of which the plaintiffs make much, but whiсh is irrelevant to the issues at hand.
. (R.2-29 ¶ 3.)
. (R.3-42-Ex.D.)
. (See R.2-29-Ex. A.)
. (See id.—Ex. B.)
. (See id.—Exs. C, D, F.)
. (See id.—Ex. B.)
. (Id.)
. (R.3-42-Ex. C.)
. (Id. at 2.)
. (R.2-29 ¶¶ 8-10.)
. (R.2-29-Ex. O.)
. (R.2-29-Exs. P-T.) The investors filed affidavits swearing that they lent the money to the Sun, and not to Royal Venture. (R.3-38-Exs.) How this testimony squares with the promissory notes from Royal Venture is unexplained, however, and indeed in his affidavit a CIT vice president who was involved in the transaction denies that CIT ever had any contact with the investors. (See R.2-29 ¶¶ 21, 24.)
.The exact theory of this claim is not clear from the complaint, but it seems that the alleged fraud is that CIT failed to tell Wilkins and the investors of the circumstances in which the letter of credit might be drawn upon, or the investors' loans spent. (See R.3-42 ¶¶ 37-40.)
. We are aware that at least one circuit has implicitly considered the rule of advancеs to arise from 46 U.S.C. § 31342, which contains a mandatory presumption- that credit is extended to the vessel. See 46 U.S.C. § 31342(a)(3); International Seafoods of Alaska, Inc. v. Park Ventures, Inc.,
. It aрpears from the record that the escrow account was never provided; a letter from Royal Venture’s chairman in October 1996 describes Wilkins as "an unsecured creditor of a company which 'is producing no income.” (R.2-29-Ex. U.)
Interestingly, the agreement recites that “a portion of the consideration for the purchаse of Vessel by Sun [Travel] is the establishment of a $1.5 million standby letter of credit with Nations-Bank..” (R.2-29-Ex. O). If the letter of credit is so, characterized, its purchase plainly does not grant Wilkins a maritime lien; advances for the purchase of a vessel do not give rise to a lien. See The Sarah Harris, 21 Fed.Cas. 447, 448, No. 12,346 (S.D.N.Y.1874).
. The complaint does not allege, for instance, where CIT has its рrincipal place of business or of what states some of the individual plaintiffs are citizens.
. The plaintiffs' motion to intervene was granted November 26, 1996, and the complaint was filed that same day. The amendment to § 1332(a) raising the required amount in controversy to $75,000 became effective January 17, 1997, 90 days after the amendment was enacted. See Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1996, Pub.L. No. 104-317, § 205(b), 110 Stat. 3847, 3850 (1996).
